1. 


The  Far  East. 

Journals  on  the  Far  East. 

2.  Business  in  the  Far  East. 

3.  Japanese  History. 

4.  Travel  in  Japan. 

Social,  Industrial  and  Political 
Life  of  Japan. 

5.  Japanese  Art. 

6.  Japanese  Literature. 

7.  Japanese  Language. 

Novels  of  Japan. 

•  8.  General  Information  on  China. 
Chinese  History. 


9.  Travel  and  Social  Life  of 
China. 

-10.  Religion,  Education  and 
Literature  of  China. 

11.  Chinese  Art. 

12.  Politics,  Commerce  and  For¬ 

eign  Relations  of  New 
China. 

Novels  of  China. 

'‘13.  Chinese  Language. 

14.  Borneo  and  New  Guinea. 

15.  Formosa  and  Japan. 

16.  Philippine  Islands. 


Rook  Lists  on  thjL  Far  East 

(jPuhl  ic  Library")  Newark,  N.  J. 


The  above  sixteen  lists  were  published  in  1921.  Revisions  of  some  of  them 
and  additional  lists  on  other  countries  have  been  printed  and  are  listed  below. 
Ten  of  the  lists  with  note  “Revised”  are  revisions  of  the  first  edition. 

Newark ,  N.  J.  The  Public  Library 

February,  1922 


17. 

18. 

19. 

20. 
21. 
22. 

23. 

24. 

25. 

26. 

27. 

28. 

29. 


Siam. 

Tibet.  Travel  and  Exploration,  1 
Tibet.  Travel  and  Exploration,  2 


32.  Travel  in  Japan.  Revised 

33.  Social,  Industrial  and  Political 

Life  of  Japan.  Revised 


Tibet.  Its  History  and  Religion.  34. 
India.  Country:  People:  Customs.  "*35. 

India.  History:  Politics:  Govern¬ 
ment. 


India.  Philosophy  and  Religion. 


India.  Language  and  Classic 
Literature.  ^ 

India.  Art. 


436. 


37. 


India.  Literature  of  Modern 
India. 

The  Far  East.  Revised 

Journals  on  the  Far  East. 
Novels  on  China.  Revised 

Business  with  the  Far  East. 
Revised 


\ 


38. 


39. 


\ 


40. 

41. 


Japan’s  Foreign  Relations. 

A  Novelist  on  China. 

General  Information  on  China. 
Revised 

Chinese  History.  Revised 

Travel  and  Social  Life  in  China. 
Revised 

Politics,  Commerce  and  Foreign 
Relations  of  New  China.  Re¬ 
vised. 

Maps  of  the  Far  East.  Asia. 

Maps  of  the  Far  East.  Asia. 
Conte,  Korea;  Manchuria. 

Maps  of  the  Far  East.  China. 

Maps  of  the  Far  East.  East 
Indies;  Siam. 


30.  Business  With  the  Far  East. 

Re/ised 

31.  Japanese  History.  Revised 


42.  Maps  of  the  Far  East.  Japan. 

43.  Maps  of  the  Far  East.  Japan 

Cont.;  Philippine  Islands. 


Map  to  Accompany  Far  Eastern  Book  and  Journal  Lists 


This  outline  map  should  give  you  some  impression  of  what  we  call 
the  Far  East  including  here  the  East  Indies.  The  area  covered  by  map 
is  6,500  miles  east  and  west,  and  7,000  miles  north  and  south.  Within 
this  area  live  about  850,000,000  people,  half  the  population  of  the  globe. 

On  the  other  side  of  this  sheet  are  the  titles  of  sixteen  different  lists 
of  books  compiled  by  the  Library,  from  five  to  fifteen  books  on  each 
list,  nearly  all  of  which  may  be  borrowed  for  home  use. 

Ask  for  the  list  you  wish. 

The  Library  has  many  other  books  on  these  and  the  other  countries 
and  islands  not  named  here,  besides  maps  and  pictures  by  thousands  of 
every  part  of  the  Far  East. 

The  Public  Library,  Newark,  N.  J. 

March,  1921 


8.  China  and  its  History 

Far  Eastern  Book  and  Journal  Lists 

Public  Library,  Newark,  N.  J. 


These  books  here  listed  can  be  borrowed  for  home  use  unless  the  call  number  is 
followed  by  the  letter  R.  The  list  does  not  include  all  the  library’s  resources  on 
this  subject;  for  it  has  guide  books,  universal  geographies,  etc.,  separate  maps, 
business  and  other  directories  of  these  islands  or  countries.  Business  information 
about  these  countries  will  be  found  at  the  Business  Branch  on  Beaver  Street  as 
well  as  at  the  main  library.  Many  of  these  books  have  pictures;  but  several 
thousand  more  pictures  are  in  the  picture  collection,  Art  Department. 


/? 


GENERAL  INFORMATION 


China  Year  Book.  London.  Routledge.  1919. 


CHINA 


310  C44  R 


Couling,  Samuel.  Encyclopaedia  Sinica.  London.  Oxford  Univ. 

Press.  1917.  *  951  C83  R 

Giles,  H.  A.  Chinese  Biographical  Dictionary.  Shanghai.  Kelly  & 


Walsh.  1898. 


*  -Sr  « 


920  G39  R 


.  ^  CHINESE  HISTORY  /V?Y 

Bashford,  J.  W.  China;  an  interpretation.  N.  Y.  Abingdon  Press. 

1916.  >  951  B29 

Bland,  J.  O.  P.  China  under  the  Empress  Dowager.  Phil.  Lippin- 
cott.  1910.  951  B61 

Brown,  A.  J.  The  Chinese  Revolution.  N.  Y.  Student  Volunteer 
Movement.  1912.  951  B811 

Cantlie,  James.  Sun  Yat  Sen  and  the  Awakening  of  China.  N.  Y. 
_  Reyell. .  J*  051  C16 

Giles,  H.  A.  The' Civilization  of  China.  N.  Y.  Holt.  1911.  951.1  G39 
Gowen,  H.  H.  An  Outline  History  of  China.  Bost.  Sherman, 
French.  1917.  951  G74 

Griffis,  W.  E.  China’s  Story  in  Myth,  Legend,  Art  and  Annals.  Bost. 

Houghton.  1911.  951  G87 

Hirth,  Frederick.  The  Ancient  History  of  China.  N.  Y.  Columbia 
Univ.  1908.  951  H61 

Latourette,  K.  S.  Development  of  China.  Bost.  Houghton.  1917.  951  L35 
Latourette,  K.  S.  History  of  Early  Relations  between  the  U.  S.  and  China. 

1784-1844.  New  Haven.  Yale  Univ.  1917.  327  L35 

Parker,  E.  H.  China,  her  History,  Diplomacy  and  Commerce.  London. 

Murray.  1917.  951  P22 

Ross,  E.  A.  The  Changing  Chinese.  N.  Y.  Century.  1911.  915.1  R73 


/ 


•>  * 


' 


9:  Travel  and  Social  Life 

in  China 

Far  Eastern  Book  and  Journal  Lists 

Public  Library,  Newark,  N.  J. 

These  books  here  listed  can  be  borrowed  for  home  use  unless  the  call  number  is 
followed  by  the  letter  R.  The  list  does  not  include  all  the  library’s  resources  on 
this  subject;  for  it  has  guide  books,  universal  geographies,  etc.,  separate  maps, 
business  and  other  directories  of  these  islands  or  countries.  Business  information 
about  these  countries  will  be  found  at  the  Business  Branch  on  Beaver  Street  as 
well  as  at  the  main  library.  Many  of  these  books  have  pictures;  but  several 
thousand  more  pictures  are  in  the  picture  collection.  Art  Department. 

Andrews,  R.  C.  Camps  and  Trails  in  China.  N.  Y.  Appleton. 

1918.  915.1  An2 

Ball,  J.  D.  The  Chinese  at  Horne.  N.  Y.  Revell.  1912.  915.1  B211 

Bard,  Emile.  Chinese  Life  in  Town  and  Country.  N.  Y.  Putnam. 

1905.  915.1  B23 

Borel,  Henri.  The  New  China.  Lond.  Unwin.  1912.  915.1  B642 

Conger,  Mrs.  S.  P.  Letters  from  China.  Chic.  McClurg.  1909.  915.1  C76 
Cooper,  Mrs.  E.  B.  My  Lady  of  the  Chinese  Courtyard.  N.  Y. 

Stokes.  1914.  915.1  C78 

Der  Ling,  Princess.  Two  Years  in  the  Forbidden  City.  N.  Y.  Moffat. 

1911.  915.1  D44 

Dewey,  John.  Letters  from  China  and  Japan.  N.  Y.  Dutton. 

1920.  915  D51 

Dingle,  E.  J.  Across  China  on  Foot.  N.  Y.  Holt.  1911.  915.1  D61 

Geil,  W.  E.  Eighteen  Capitals  of  China.  Phil.  Lippincott. 

1911.  915.1  G2711 

Geil,  W.  E.  The  Great  Wall  of  China.  N.  Y.  Sturgis.  1909.  915.1  G271 
Johnston,  R.  F.  From  Peking  to  Mandalay.  Lond.  Murray. 

1908.  915.1  J642 

Little,  Archibald.  The  Far  East.  Oxford.  Clar.  Press.  1905.  915.1  L722 

MacGowan,  John.  Men  and  Manners  of  Modern  China.  N.  Y. 

Dodd.  1912.  915.1  M17 

Madrolle,  Claudius.  Northern  China;  a  handbook  for  travelers  in 

Northern  China  and  Korea.  Lond.  Hachette.  1912.  915.1  M26  R 

Morse,  E.  S.  Glimpses  of  China  and  Chinese  Homes.  Boston.  Little. 

1902.  915.1  M833 

Official  Guide  to  Eastern  Asia.  v.  4.  China.  Tokyo.  Imperial  Jap. 

Gov.  Rys.  1915.  915  Of 2  R 

Ollone,  H.  M.  G.  d\  In  Forbidden  China.  Bost.  Small.  1912.  915.1  014 

Pollard,  S.  In  Unknown  China.  Phil.  Lippincott.  1921.  915.1  P76 

Richard,  L.  Comprehensive  Geography  of  the  Chinese  Empire  and 

Dependencies.  Shanghai.  Tusewei  Press.  1908.  915.1  R38 

Roe,  A.  S.  Chance  and  Change  in  China.  N.  Y.  Doran.  1920.  915.1  R62 
Smith,  A.  H.  Village  Life  in  China.  N.  Y.  Revell.  1899.  915.1  Sm51 

Thomson,  John.  Illustrations  of  China  and  its  People.  Lond.  Low. 

1900.  915.1  T3811  R 

Werner,  E.T.C.  China  of  the  Chinese.  N.Y.  Scribner.  1919.  915.1  W49 
Ycunghusband,  Francis.  Among  the  Celestials.  Lond.  Murray. 

1898.  915.1  Yo8 


. 


. 


(/ 


10.  Religion,  Education  and 
Literature  of  China 

Far  Eastern  Book  and  Journal  Lists 

Public  Library,  Newark,  N.  J. 

These  books  here  listed  can  be  borrowed  for  home  use  unless  the  call  number  is 
followed  by  the  letter  R.  The  list  does  not  include  all  the  library’s  resources  on 
this  subject;  for  it  has  guide  books,  universal  geographies,  etc.,  separate  maps, 
business  and  other  directories  of  these  islands  or  countries.  Business  information 
about  these  countries  will  be  found  at  the  Business  Branch  on  Beaver  Street  as 
well  as  at  the  main  library.  Many  of  these  books  have  pictures;  but  several 
thousand  more  pictures  are  in  the  picture  collection,  Art  Department. 

Brinkley,  Francis.  China;  its  history,  arts  and  literature.  4  v.  Bost. 

Millet.  1902.  915.1  B  77 

Brown,  Brian,  ed.  The  Wisdom  of  the  Chinese.  N.  Y.  Brentano. 

1920.  895  B81 

Burton,  M.  E.  The  Education  of  Women  in  China.  N.  Y.  Revell. 

1911.  •  <*<**••  n,  e.396.4  B95 

Confucius.  The  Ethics  of  Confucius.  N.  Y.  Putnam.  1915.  181  C7611 

Cranmcr-Byng,  L.  A.,  tr.  A  Lute  of  Jade ;  being  selections  from  the 
Classical  Poets  of  China.  N.  Y.  Dutton.  1909  895  C851 

Educational  Directory  and  Year  Book  of  China.  Shanghai.  Evans. 

1918.  379.5  Ed8  R 
Giles,  H.  A.  History  of  Chinese  Literature.  N.  Y.  Appleton. 

1901. 

Giles,  H.  A.  Religions  of  Ancient  China.  Lond. 

1905. 

Groot,  J.  J.  M.  de.  The  Religion  of  the  Chinese.  N. 

1910. 

Henke,  F.  G.  The  Philosophy  of  Wang  Yang-Ming.  Chicago.  Open 
Court.  1916.  181  W18 

King,  H.  E.  Educational  System  of  China  as  Recently  Constructed. 

Wash.,  D.  C.  Gov.  Pr.  Off.  1911.  379.5  K58 

Kuo,  Ping  Wen.  Chinese  System  of  Public  Education.  N.  Y.  Co¬ 
lumbia  Univ.  1915.  370.9  K96 

Lao-Tsze.  Loatzu’s  Tao  and  Wu  Wei.  N.  Y.  Brentano.  1919.  299  L29 

Legge,  James.  The  Chinese  Classics.  7  vols.  Lond.  Triibner. 

1861-72.  299  L52 

Legge,  James.  Religions  of  China.  N.  Y.  Scribner.  1880.  299  L521 

Lewis,  I.  B.  Education  of  Girls  in  China.  N.  Y.  Columbia  Univ. 

1919.  396.4  L58 

Martin,  W.  A.  Lore  of  Cathay.  N.  Y.  Revell.  1901  915.1  M363 

Pu  Sung-ling.  Strange  Stories  from  a  Chinese  Studio.  Lond. 

Laurie.  1916.  895  P971 

Suzuki,  Daisetz  Teitaro.  A  Brief  History  of  Early  Chinese  Phil¬ 
osophy.  Lond.  Probsthain.  1914.  181  Su9 

Hundred  and  Seventy  Chinese  Poems.  Lond. 


895  G39 
Constable. 

299  G39 
Y.  Macm. 
299  D362 


Waley,  Arthur.  A 
Constable.  1918. 


895  W14 


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11.  Chinese  Art 

Far  Eastern  Book  and  Journal  Lists 

Public  Library,  Newark,  N.  J. 

These  books  here  listed  can  be  borrowed  for  home  use  unless  the  call  number  is 
followed  by  the  letter  R.  The  list  does  not  include  all  the  library’s  resources  on 
this  subject;  for  it  has  guide  books,  universal  geographies,  etc.,  separate  maps, 
business  and  other  directories  of  these  islands  or  countries.  Business  information 
about  these  countries  will  be  found  at  the  Business  Branch  on  Beaver  Street  as 
well  as  at  the  main  library.  Many  of  these  books  have  pictures;  but  several 
thousand  more  pictures  are  in  the  picture  collection,  Art  Department. 

Binyon,  R.  L.  Painting  in  the  Far  East.  Lond.  Arnold.  1908.  759.9  B51R 
Binyon,  R.  L.  Flight  of  the  Dragon ;  an  essay  on  the  theory  and  prac¬ 
tice  of  Art  in  China  and  Japan.  N.  Y.  Dutton.  759.91  B51 

Boston  Museum  of  Fine  Arts.  Special  Exhibition  of  Ancient  Chinese 
Buddhist  Paintings  (catalog).  1894.  759.91  B65  R 

Bushell,  S.  W.  Chinese  Art.  2v.  Lond.  Wyman.  1904-9.  709  B96 
Fenollosa,  E.  F.  Epochs  of  Chinese  and  Japanese  Art.  N.  Y.  Stokes. 

1912.  2  v.  709.5  F56  R 

Ferguson,  J.  C.  Outlines  of  Chinese  Art.  Chic.  Art  Institute  of 
Chic.  1919.  709.5  F38 

Giles,  H.  A.  Chinese  Pictorial  Art.  Lond.  Quaritch.  1918.  759.91  G39  R 
Hippisley,  A.  E.  Sketch  of  the  History  of  Ceramic  Art  in  China. 

n.  p.  n.  d.  738  H61 

Hirth,  Friedrich.  Scraps  from  a  Collector’s  Note  Book.  Chinese 
Painters  of  the  Present  Dynasty.  N.Y.  Stechert.  1905.  759.91  H61 

Hodgson,  Mrs.  Willoughby.  How  to  Identify  Old  Chinese  Porcelain. 

Chic.  McClurg.  1907.  738  H661 

Japan  Society.  Chinese,  Corean  and  Japanese  Potteries.  N.  Y. 

Japan  Soc.  1914.  738  J27  R 

Laufer.  Chinese  Pottery  of  the  Han  Dynasty.  Leiden.  Brill. 

1909.  738  L36  R 

(Les)  Etoffes  de  la  Chine;  tissus  and  broderies.  Paris.  Calavas. 

n.  d.  Plates. 

Matsuki,  Bunkis.  Illustrated  Catalog  of  Ancient  Chinese  and  Japan¬ 
ese  Paintings,  Screens,  etc.  N.  Y.  Anderson  Auction  Co. 

1910.  709.5  M42  R 

Morgan,  J.  P.  Catalog  of  the  Morgan  Collection  of  Chinese  Porce¬ 
lains.  Bushell  &  Laffan.  N.  Y.  Metropolitan  Museum. 

1907.  738  M82  R 

Petrucci,  Raphael.  Chinese  Painters.  N.  Y.  Brentano.  1920.  759.91  P44 
Petrucci,  Raphael,  tr.  Kiai-Tseu-Yuan  Houa  Tchouan.  (Les  en- 
seignements  de  la  peinture  du  jardin  grand  comme  un  grain  de 
moutarde)  ;  encyclopedic  de  la  peinture  Chinoise.  Paris.  Renouard. 
1918.  759.91  P441  R 

Taki,  S.  I.  Three  Essays  on  Oriental  Painting.  Lond.  Quaritch. 

1910.  759.9  T13  R 

T redwell,  W.  R.  Chinese  Art  Motives.  N.Y.  Putnam.  1915.  700  T71 


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I  2.  New  China  and  Novels  of  China 


Far  Eastern  Book  and  Journal  Lists 

Public  Library,  Newark,  N.  J. 


These  books  here  listed  can  be  borrowed  for  home  use  unless  the  call  number  is 
followed  by  the  letter  R.  The  list  does  not  include  all  the  library’s  resources  on 
this  subject;  for  it  has  guide  books,  universal  geographies,  etc.,  separate  maps, 
business  and  other  directories  of  these  islands  or  countries.  Business  information 
about  these  countries  will  be  found  at  the  Business  Branch  on  Beaver  Street  as 
well  as  at  the  main  library.  Many  of  these  books  have  pictures;  but  several 
thousand  more  pictures  are  in  the  picture  collection,  Art  Department. 


POLITICS,  COMMERCE  AND  FOREIGN  RELATIONS  OF 

NEW  CHINA 

Blakeslee,  G.  H.  ed.  China  and  the  Far  East.  N.  Y.  Crowell. 

1910.  915.1  B58 

Cecil,  Lord  W.  G.  Changing  China.  N.  Y.  Appleton.  1912.  951  C32 
Cheng,  Sih-Gung.  Modern  China.  Oxford.  Clar.  Press.  1919.  951  C42 
Foster,  J.  W.  American  Diplomacy  in  the  Orient.  Bost.  Houghton. 

1903.  327  F81 

Harding,  G.  L  Present-day  China.  N.  Y.  Century.  1916.  951  H21 

Hornbeck,  S.  K.  Contemporary  Politics  in  the  Far  East.  N.  Y. 

Appleton.  1916.  327  H78 

Morse,  H.  B.  The  Trade  and  Administration  of  the  Chinese  Em¬ 
pire.  N.  Y.  Longmans.  1908.  380  M832 

Overlach,  T.  W.  Foreign  Financial  Control  in  China.  N.  Y.  Macm. 

1919.  336.5  Ov2 

Tvau,  Minchien  Tuk  Zung.  China’s  New  Constitution  and  Interna¬ 
tional  Problems.  Shanghai.  Commercial  Press.  1920.  342.1  T95 

Weale,  B.  L.  P.  The  Fight  for  the  Republic  in  China.  N.  Y.  Dodd. 

1917.  951  W371 

Weale,  B.  L.  P.  The  Truth  about  China  and  Japan.  N.  Y.  Dodd. 

1919.  915  W3712 


NOVELS  OF  CHINA 


Alsop,  G.  F.  My  Chinese  Daya.  Bost.  Little.  1918. 
Comfort,  W.  L.  Last  Ditch.  N.  Y.  Doran.  1916. 

Comfort,  W.  L.  Yellow  Lord.  N.  Y.  Doran.  1919. 

Miln,  L.  J.  Mr.  Wu.  N.  Y.  Stokes.  1920. 

Merwin,  S.  Hills  of  Han.  Indianapolis.  Bobbs.  1920. 
Rideout,  H.  M.  Siamese  Cat.  N.  Y.  Duffield.  1919. 

Weale,  B.  L.  P.  Unknown  God.  N.  Y.  Dodd.  1911. 

Weale,  B.  L.  P.  Human  Cobweb.  N.  Y.  Dodd.  1910. 

Weale,  B.  L.  P.  Wang  the  Ninth.  N.  Y.  Dodd.  1920. 
Wherry,  E.  Red  Lantern.  N.  Y.  Lane.  1911. 

Wherry,  E.  Wanderer  on  a  Thousand  Hills.  N.  Y.  Lane. 


/ 


1917. 


. 

. 

•  .  ..  .-V  • 


- 


•  • 


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. 


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13.  Chinese  Language 

Far  Eastern  Book  and  Journal  Lists 

Public  Library,  Newark,  N.  J. 

These  books  here  listed  can  be  borrowed  for  home  use  unless  the  call  number  is 
followed  by  the  letter  R.  The  list  does  not  include  all  the  library’s  resources  on 
this  subject;  for  it  has  guide  books,  universal  geographies,  etc.,  separate  maps, 
business  and  other  directories  of  these  islands  or  countries.  Business  information 
about  these  countries  will  be  found  at  the  Business  Branch  on  Beaver  Street  as 
well  as  at  the  main  library.  Many  of  these  books  have  pictures;  but  several 
thousand  more  pictures  are  in  the  picture  collection,  Art  Department. 

Brouner,  W.  B.  Chinese  Made  Easy.  N.  Y.  Macm.  1904.  495  B79 

Bullock,  T.  L.  Progressive  Exercises  in  the  Chinese  Written  Lan¬ 
guage.  Lond.  Lockwood.  1912.  495  B87 

Chinese  and  English  Phrase  Book  and  Dictionary.  Vancouver,  B.  C. 

Thomson  Stationery  Co.  1913.  495  C44  R 

Darroch,  John.  Chinese  Self-taught.  Lond.  E.  Marlborough  &  Co. 

1916.  495  D25 

Foster,  Arnold.  Elementary  Lessons  in  Chinese.  Lond.  Milford. 

n.  d.  495  F81 

Giles,  H.  A.  A  Chinese-English  Dictionary.  7  vols.  Shanghai. 

Kelly  &  Walsh.  1909-12.  495  G39  R 

Giles,  H.  A.  Elementary  Chinese.  Shanghai.  Kelly.  1910.  495  G391 

Hillier,  Sir  W.  C.  The  Chinese  Language  and  How  to  Learn  It.  2  v. 

Shanghai.  Kelly.  1909-16.  495  H55 

Hillier,  Sir  W.  C.  English-Chinese  Dictionary  of  Peking  Colloquial. 

Lond.  Paul.  1918.  495  H551 

Jones  and  Peake.  Six  Thousand  Chinese  Characters.  Tokyo.  Kyo- 
Bun-Kwan. 

Soothill,  W.  E.  Student’s  Four  Thousand  Characters  and  General 
Pocket  Dictionary.  Shanghai.  Amer.  Press  Mission.  1917.  495  So6 
Stedman,  T.  L.  and  Lee,  K.  P.  Chinese-English  Phrase  Book  in  the 
Canton  Dialect.  N.  Y.  Jenkins.  1888.  495  St3 

Terrien  de  Lacouperie,  A.  E.  J.  B.  The  Languages  of  China  before 
the  Chinese.  Lond.  Nutt.  1887.  495  T27 

Wieger,  Leon.  Chinese  Characters,  their  Origin,  Etymology,  History, 
Classification  and  Signification.  2  v.  Ho-Kien-Fu.  Catholic  Mis¬ 
sion  Press.  1915.  495  W63  R 

Williams,  S.  W.  A  Syllabic  Dictionary  of  the  Chinese  Language. 
Tung  Chou.  North  China  Union  College.  1909.  495  W67 


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35.  A  Novelist  on  China 

Far  Eastern  Book  and  Journal  Lists 

Public  Library,  Newark,  N.  J. 

From  “IN  RED  AND  GOLD,”  by  Samuel  Merwin 

Copyright,  1921.  Used  by  special  permission  of  the  publishers, 

The  Bobbs-Merrill  Company 

4 

Page  7:  A  mighty  river,  indeed,  is  the  Yangtze.  During  half  the  year 
battle-ships  of  reasonably  deep  draught  may  reach  Hankow.  In  the 
heyday  of  the  sailing  trade  clippers  out  of  New  York  and  blunt  lime- 
juicers  out  of  Liverpool  were  any  day  sights  from  the  bund  there. 
Through  a  busy  and  not  seldom  bloody  century  the  merchants  of  a 
clamorous  outside  world  have  roved  the  great  river  (where  yellow 
merchants  of  the  Middle  Kingdom,  in  sampan,  barge  and  junk,  roved 
fifty  centuries  before  them)  with  rich  cargoes  of  tea  (in  leaden  chests 
that  bore  historic  ideographs  on  the  enclosing  matting) —  with  hides 
and  horns  and  coal  from  Hupeh  and  furs  and  musk  from  far-away 
Szechuen,  with  soya  beans  and  rice  and  bristles  and  nutgalls  and  spices 
and  sesamum,  with  varnish-  and  tung  oil  and  vegetable  tallow,  with 
cotton,  ramie,  rape  and  hemp,  with  copper,  quicksilver,  slate,  lead  and 
antimony,  with  porcelains  and  silk.  Along  this  river  that  today  divides 
an  empire  into  two  vast  and  populous  domains  a  thousand  thousand  for¬ 
tunes  have  been  gained  and  lost,  rebellions  and  wars  have  raged, 
famines  have  blighted  whole  peoples.  Forts,  pagodas,  and  palaces  have 
lined  its  banks.  The  gilded  barges  of  emperors  have  drifted  idly  on  its 
broad  bosom.  Exquisite  painted  beauties  have  found  mirrors  in  its 
neighboring  canals. 


Page  35 :  His  own  thoughts  were  ranging  swiftly  back  over  two 
thousand  years,  to  the  strong  civilization  of  the  Han  Dynasty,  when 
disciplined  Chinese  armies  kept  open  the  overland  route  to  Bactria  and 
Parthia,  that  the  silks  and  porcelains  and  pearls  might  travel  safely  to 
waiting  Roman  hands;  to  the  later,  richer,  riper  centuries  of  Tang 
and  Sung,  after  Rome  fell,  when  Chinese  civilization  stood  alone,  a 
majestic  fabric  in  an  otherwise  crumbled  and  chaotic  world — when 
certain  of  the  noblest  landscapes  and  portraits  ever  painted  were  finding 
expression,  when  philosophers  held  high  dreams  of  building  conflicting 
dogma  into  a  single  structure  of  comprehensive  and  serene  faith.  The 
Chinese  alone,  down  the  uncounted  centuries,  had  held  their  racial 
integrity,  their  very  language.  Surely,  at  some  mystical  but  seismic 
turning  of  the  racial  tide,  they  would  rise  again  among  the  nations. 


Page  225 :  First  I  must  tell  ,you  this — the  Chinese  civilization  has 
been — in  certain  aspects  still  remains — the  finest  the  world  has  known. 
With  one  exception,  doubtless — the  Grecian.  *  *  * 

The  Chinese  worked  out  their  social  philosophy  long  ago.  They 
have  lived  through  a  great  deal  that  we  have  only  begun,  from  tribal 
struggles  through  conquest  and  imperialism  and  civil  war  to  a  sort  of 


List  35 — p.  2 

republicanism  and  a  fine  feeling  for  peace  and  justice.  And  then, 
when  they  had  given  up  primitive  desire  for  fighting  they  were  con¬ 
quered  by  more  primitive  Northern  tribes — first  the  Mongols,  and  later 
the  Manchus.  The  Manchus  have  been  absorbed,  have  become  more  or 
less  Chinese.  **  *  * 

The  Chinese  are  the  most  democratic  people  in  the  world.  No  ruler 
can  long  resist  the  quiet  force  of  the  scores  of  thousands  of  villages 
and  neighborhoods  of  the  empire. 

They  are  the  most  reasonable  people  in  the  world.  You  can  no  more 
judge  them  from  the  so-called  Tongs  in  New  York  and  San  Francisco, 
made  up  of  a  few  Cantonese  expatriates,  than  you  can  judge  the  culture 
of  England  by  the  beachcombers  of  the  South  Seas. 

They  developed,  centuries  before  Europe,  one  of  the  finest  schools 
of  painting  the  world  has  so  far  known.  There  is  no  school  of  reflec¬ 
tive,  philosophical  poetry  so  ripe  and  so  fine  as  the  Chinese.  They  have 
had  fifty  Wordsworths,  if  no  Shakespeare. 

You  will  find  Americans  confusing  them  with  the  Japanese,  whom 
they  resemble  only  remotely.  All  that  is  finest  in  Japan — in  art  and 
literature — came  originally  from  China.  *  *  * 

What  I  am  trying  to  make  clear  to  you  is  that  in  old  Central  China 
— in  Hang  Chow,  and  along  this  fertile  Yangtze  Valley,  and  northwest 
through  the  Great  Plain  to  Kai  Feng-fu  and  Sian-fu  in  Shensi — where 
the  older  people  flourished — germinated  the  thought  and  the  art,  the 
humanity  and  the  faith,  that  have  been  a  source  of  culture  to  half  the 
world  during  thousands  of  years. 

But  you  can  not  hope  to  understand  this  culture  through  Western 
eyes.  For  you  will  be  looking  out  of  a  Western  background.  You 
must  actually  surrender  your  background.  It  is  no  good  looking  at  a 
Chinese  landscape  or  a  portrait  with  eyes  that  have  known  only  Euro¬ 
pean  painting.  Can  you  see  why?  Because  all  through  European  paint¬ 
ing  runs  the  idea  of  copying  nature — somehow,  however  subtly,  however 
influenced  by  the  nuances  of  color  and  light,  copying.  But  the  Chinese 
master  never  copied  a  landscape.  He  studied  it,  felt  it,  surrendered 
his  soul  to  it,  and  then  painted  the  fine  emotion  that  resulted.  And, 
remember  this,  he  painted  with  a  conscious  technical  skill  as  fine  as 
that  of  Velasquez  or  Whistler  or  Monet. 


Page  324:  Behind  the  crumbling  of  the  empire,  underlying  the  torn 
and  bleeding  surface  of  Chinese  life,  lay  a  tradition  finer,  he  was  to 
believe  until  his  dying  day,  than  any  so  far  developed  in  the  truculent 
West — a  delicate  responsiveness  to  beauty  in  nature  and  art,  a  reflec¬ 
tive  quality,  an  instinct  for  peace — it  was  all  these  at  once,  and  more ; 
a  blend  of  art  in  living  and  living  in  art;  a  finish  that  was  exquisite  in 
concept,  a  sensitiveness  that  lifted  the  soul  of  man  above  the  ugly  fact. 

To  the  Americans  must  be  preached  the  gospel  of  sensitive  thought, 
of  reflective  enjoyment  of  the  beautiful.  Those  old  master  painters  of 
Tang  and  Sung  breathed  beauty;  it  was  sweet  air  in  their  lungs; 
whereas  in  America  beauty  was  too  often  like  a  garment  to  be  bought 
in  a  shop  and  worn  for  show. 


Page  338:  “It’s  been  an  interesting  journey  for  me,  Rocky.  It's 
enabled  me  to  understand  somewhat  the  delicate  international  situation 


List  35 — p.  3 

out  here.  I  couldn’t  see  why  our  agents  weren’t  accomplishing  more. 
The  trouble  is,  of  course,  that  every  square  foot  of  China  is  staked 
out  by  the  European  nations.  If  you  don’t  believe  that,  just  get  a  con¬ 
cession  from  the  Chinese  Government — for  a  big  job — water  power 
development,  mining  railway  building,  or  an  industrial  monoply — that 
part  of  it  isn’t  so  hard — and  then  try  to  carry  it  through.  You’d  find 
out  fast  enough  who  are  the  real  owners  of  China.  And  those  owners 
would  never  let  you  start.” 


Who  Own  Asia  and  the  Pacific  Islands? 

ACTUAL  SOVEREIGNTY  OF  ASIA  AND  THE  PACIFIC 


Area  in 

Sovereign  power  square  miles  Population 

Russian  (European  Russia:  Area:  1,867,737; 

Pop.  131,700,800)  .  7,805,714  31,277,820 

British  (Excluding  Arabia  and  the  Near  East) 

(Great  Britain  and  Ireland:  Area:  121,683; 

Pop.  45,516,259)  . 6,716,395  357,528,837 

French  (France.  Area:  207,054;  Pop.  39,602,258)  275,390  17,339,031 

Anglo-French  (Under  special  agreement)  New 

Hebrides  .  5,100  70,000 

(Under  Tacit  understanding)  Siam, .  195,000  8,827,000 

Dutch  (The  Netherlands:  Area:  12,582;  Pop. 

6,724,663)  .  735.129  37,718,177 

Portuguese  (Portugal:  Area:  34,254;  Pop. 

5,545,505)  .  8,972  1,001,153 

American  (Continental  U.  S.  A.  Excluding 
Alaska  *  Area:  2,973,890;  Pop.  (about) 

100,000,000)  .  121,776  9,272,521 

International  (By  treaty  and  bly  threat)  China....  2,202,000  386,886,000 

Actual  Asiatic  Sovereignty  Japan .  353,191  82,944,482 

Land  area  and  population  of  Asia  and  the 
Pacific  Islands  .  18,418,666  932,865,021 


China  is  a  sovereign  power  in  name  only.  The  legation  quarter  in 
Peking  is  a  foreign  military  camp.  The  inland  waters  of  China  are 
patrolled  by  foreign  gunboats.  The  railways  connecting  the  capital 
and  the  coast  (under  foreign  control)  are  guarded  by  foreign  garri¬ 
sons.  Troops  of  foreign  nations  are  stationed  in  inland  cities.  China’s 
chief  ports  are  owned  or  controlled  by  foreign  powers.  The  customs, 
salt  internal  revenue,  wine  and  spirit  revenue  and  the  post  and  telegraph 
service  are  controlled  by  foreigners.  China  is  pockmarked  by  foreign 
concessions  and  pierced  by  foreign  jurisdiction;  and  steadily  China’s 
domain  is  dwindling  under  the  relentless  pressure  of  alien  penetration. 

From  “America’s  Aims  and  Asia’s  Aspirations,”  by  Patrick  Gallagher. 
Copyright,  1920.  Used  by  special  permission  of  the  publishers,  The 
Century  Company. 

The  list  of  books  of  General  Information  on  China  and  The  History  of  China, 
on  the  following  page,  is  supplemented  by  other  lists  on  China  in  this  series: 
10.  Religion,  Education  and  Literature  of  China;  11.  Chinese  Art;  13.  Chinese 
Language;  28.  Novels  of  China;  36.  Travel  and  Social  Life  in  China;  37.  New 
China;  39  and  40.  Maps  of  the  Far  East. 


List  35 — p.  4 


China  and  Its  History 

Far  Eastern  Book  and  Journal  Lists 

Public  Library,  Newark,  N.  J. 

These  books  here  listed  can  be  borrowed  for  home  use  unless  the  call  number  is 
followed  by  the  letter  R.  The  list  does  not  include  all  the  library’s  resources  on 
this  subject;  for  it  has  guide  books,  universal  geographies,  etc.,  separate  maps, 
pamphlets,  business  and  other  directories  on  these  islands  or  countries.  Many  of 
the  books  have  pictures;  but  several  thousand  more  pictures  are  in  the  picture 
collection,  Art  department.  The  Business  Branch  on  Beaver  St.,  can  furnish  exact, 
up-to-date  business  information  about  these  countries. 

GENERAL  INFORMATION  ON  CHINA 

Carnegie  Inst,  of  Washington.  Research  in  China.  3  v.  and  Atlas. 

Wash.  Carnegie  Inst.  1907.  508.3  C21  R 

China  Year  Book.  Lond.  Routledge.  310  C44  R 

Couling,  Samuel.  Encyclopaedia  Sinica.  Oxford.  1917.  951  C83  R 

Giles,  H.  A.  Chinese  Biographical  Dictionary.  Shanghai.  Kelly  & 
Walsh.  1898.  920  G39  R 

Richard,  L-  Comprehensive  Geography  of  the  Chinese  Empire  and  De¬ 
pendencies.  Shanghai.  Tusewei  Press.  1908.  915.1  R38 

CHINESE  HISTORY 

Bashford,  J.  W.  China;  an  interpretation.  N.  Y.  Abingdon  Press. 

1916.  951  B29 

Bland,  J.  O.  P.  China  under  the  Empress  Dowager.  Phila.  Lippin- 
cott.  1910.  951  B61 

Brown,  A.  J.  Chinese  Revolution.  N.  Y.  Student  Volunteer  Move¬ 
ment.  1912.  951  B811 

Brown,  A.  J.  New  Faces  in  Old  China.  N.  Y.  Revell.  1904.  951  B81 
Cantlie,  James.  Sun  Yat  Sen  and  the  Awakening  of  China.  N.  Y. 

Revell.  1912.  951  C16 

Clements,  P,  H.  Boxer  Rebellion.  N.  Y.  Columbia  Univ.  1915. 

951  C59 

Geil,  W.  E.  Eighteen  Capitals  of  China.  Phila.  Lippincott.  1911. 

915.1  G2711 

Giles,  H.  A.  The  Civilization  of  China.  N.  Y.  Holt.  1911.  951.1  G39 
Gowen,  H.  H.  An  Outline  History  of  China.  Bost.  Sherman, 
French.  1917.  951  G74 

Griffis,  W.  E.  China’s  Story  in  Myth,  Legend,  Art  and  Annals.  Bost. 

Houghton.  1911.  951  Qg7 

Hirth,  Frederick.  The  Ancient  History  of  China.  N.  Y.  Columbia 
Univ.  1908.  951  H61 

Latourette,  K.  S.  Development  of  China.  Bost.  Houghton.  1917.  951  L35 
Latourette,  K.  S.  History  of  Early  Relations  between  the  U.  S.  and 
China.  1784-1844.  New  Haven.  Yale  Univ.  Pr.  1917.  327  L35 

Parker,  E.  H.  China,  her  History,  Diplomacy  and  Commerce.  Lond. 

Murray.  1917.  95 1  P22 

Reid,  Gilbert.  China,  Captive  or  Free?  N.  Y.  Dodd.  1921.  951  R27 
Ross,  E.  A.  The  Changing  Chinese.  N.  Y.  Century.  1911.  915.1  R73 


See  also  other  lists  on  China  in  this  section:  10.  Religion,  Education  and 
Literature  of  China;  11.  Chinese  Art;  13.  Chinese  Language;  28.  Novels  of  China- 
36.  Travel  and  Social  Life  in  China;  37.  New  China;  39  and  40.  Maps  of  the 
Far  East. 


36.  Travel  and  Social  Life  in  China 

Far  Eastern  Book  and  Journal  Lists 

Public  Library,  Newark,  N.  J. 

These  books  here  listed  can  be  borrowed  for  home  use  unless  the  call  number  is 
followed  by  the  letter  R.  The  list  does  not  include  all  the  library’s  resources  on 
this  subject;  for  it  has  guide  books,  universal  geographies,  etc.,  separate  maps, 
pamphlets,  business  and  other  directories  on  these  islands  or  countries.  Many  of 
the  books  have  pictures;  but  several  thousand  more  pictures  are  in  the  picture 
collection,  Art  department.  The  Business  Branch  on  Beaver  St.,  can  furnish  exact, 
up-to-date  business  information  about  these  countries. 

Andrews,  R.  C.  Across  Mongolian  Plains.  N.  Y.  Appleton.  1921. 

915.1  An22 

Andrews,  R.  C.  Camps  and  Trails  in  China.  N.  Y.  Appleton. 

1918.  915.1  An2 

Ball,  J.  D.  The  Chinese  at  Home.  N.  Y.  Revell.  1912.  915.1  B211 

Bard,  Emile.  Chinese  Life  in  Town  and  Country.  N.  Y.  Putnam. 

1905.  915.1  B23 

Carruthers,  A.  D.  M.  Unknown  Mongolia.  2  v.  Phila.  Lippincott. 

1914.  915.1  C23 

Conger,  Mrs.  S.  P.  Letters  from  China.  Chic.  McClurg.  1909.  915.1  C76 
Cooper,  Mrs.  E.  B.  My  Lady  of  the  Chinese  Courtyard.  N.  Y. 

Stokes.  1914.  915.1  C78 

Der  Ling,  Princess.  Two  Years  :n  the  Forbidden  City.  N.  Y.  Moffat. 

1911.  915.1  D44 

Dingle,  E.  J.  Across  China  on  Foot.  N.  Y.  Holt.  1911.  915.1  D61 

Geil,  W.  E.  The  Great  Wall  of  China.  N.  Y.  Sturgis.  1909.  915.1  G271 
Johnston,  R.  F.  From  Peking  to  Mandalay.  Lond.  Murray. 

1908.  915.1  J642 

MacGowan,  John.  Men  and  Manners  of  Modern  China.  N.  Y. 

Dodd.  1912.  915.1  M17 

Madrolle,  Claudius.  Northern  China.  Lond.  Hachette.  1912. 

915.1  M26  R 

Morse,  E.  S.  Glimpses  of  China  and  Chinese  Homes.  Bost.  Little. 

1902  915.1  M833 

Murdock,  Victor.  China  the  Mysterious  and  Marvellous.  N.  Y. 

Revell.  1920.  915.1  M94 

Official  Guide  to  Eastern  Asia.  v.  4.,  China.  Tokyo.  Imperial  Jap. 

Gov.  Rys.  1915.  *  915  Of2  R 

Ollone,  H.  M.  G.  d’  In  Forbidden  China.  Bost.  Small.  1912.  915.1  014 
Pollard,  S.  In  Unknown  China.  Phil.  Lippincott.  1921.  915.1  P76 

Roe,  A.  S.  Chance  and  Change  in  China.  N.  Y.  Doran.  1920.  915.1  R62 

Stein,  M.  A.  Ruins  of  Desert  Cathay.  2  v.  Lond.  Macm.  1912. 

915.1  St31 

Thomson,  John.  Illustrations  of  China  and  its  Peoeple.  Lond.  Low. 

1900.  915.1  T3811  R 

Thomson,  J.  S.  China  Revolutionized.  Indianapolis.  Bobbs.  1913. 

915.1  T3821 

Werner,  E.  T.  C.  China  of  the  Chinese.  N.  Y,  Scribner.  1919.  915.1  W49 
Younghusband,  Francis.  Among  the  Celestials.  Lond.  Murray. 
1898.  915.1  Yo8 


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37.  New  China 

Far  Eastern  Book  and  Journal  Lists 

Public  Library,  Newark,  N.  J. 

These  books  here  listed  can  be  borrowed  for  home  use  unless  the  call  number  is 
followed  by  the  letter  R.  The  list  does  not  include  all  the  library’s  resources  on 
this  subject;  for  it  has  guide  books,  universal  geographies,  etc.,  separate  maps, 
pamphlets,  business  and  other  directories  on  these  islands  or  countries.  Many  of 
the  books  have  pictures;  but  several  thousand  more  pictures  are  in  the  picture 
collection,  Art  department.  The  Business  Branch  on  Beaver  St.,  can  furnish  exact, 
up-to-date  business  information  about  these  countries. 

Blakeslee,  G.  H.  ed.  China  and  the  Far  East.  N.  Y.  Crowell. 

1910.  915,1  B58 

Bland,  J.  O.  P  China,  Japan  and  Korea.  N.  Y.  Scribner.  1921. 

915  B61 

Borel,  Henri.  New  China.  Lond.  Unwin.  1912.  915.1  B642 

Cecil,  Lord  W.  G.  Changing  China.  N.  Y.  Appleton.  1912.  951  C32 
Cheng,  Sih-Gung.  Modern  China.  Oxford.  Clar.  Press.  1919.  951  C42 
Foster,  J.  W.  American  Diplomacy  in  the  Orient.  Bost.  Houghton. 

1903.  327  F81 

Gibson,  R.  R.  Forces  Mining  and  Undermining  China.  N.  Y.  Cen¬ 
tury.  1914.  330.9  G35 

Harding,  G.  L.  Present-day  China.  N.  Y.  Century.  1916.  951  H21 
Hornbeck,  S.  K.  Contemporary  Politics  in  the  Far  East.  N.  Y. 

Appleton.  1916.  327  H78 

Jernigan,  T.  R.  China  in  Law  and  Commerce.  N.  Y.  Macm.  1905. 

915.1  J48 

Morse,  H.  B.  Trade  and  Administration  of  the  Chinese  Empire.  N.  Y. 

Longmans.  1908.  380  M832 

Overlach,  T.  W.  Foreign  Financial  Control  in  China.  N.  Y.  Macm. 

1919.  336.5  Ov2 

Tyau,  M.  T.  Z.  China’s  New  Constitution  and  International  Problems. 

Shanghai.  Commercial  Press.  1920.  342.1  T95 

Vinacke,  H.  M.  Modern  Constitutional  Development  in  China.  Prince¬ 
ton.  Princeton  Univ.  Press.  1920.  342.1  V73 

Weale,  B.  L.  P.  Fight  for  the  Republic  in  China.  N.  Y.  Dodd.  1917. 

951  W371 

Weale,  B.  L.  P.  Truth  about  China  and  Japan.  N.  Y.  Dodd.  1919. 

915  W3712 

Willoughby,  W.  W.  Foreign  Rights  and  Interests  in  China.  Balt. 
Johns  Hopkins.  1920.  327  W68 


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39.  Maps  of  the  Far  East 

Maps  are  at  both  Main  Library  and  Business  Branch,  except  those 
'  entries  marked  “B.  B.  only”  and  “M.  L-  only.” 

Far  Eastern  Book  and  Journal  Lists 

Public  Library,  Newark,  N.  J. 

These  books  here  listed  can  be  borrowed  for  home  use  unless  the  call  number  is 
followed  by  the  letter  R.  The  list  does  not  include  all  the  library’s  resources  on 
this  subject;  for  it  has  guide  books,  universal  geographies,  etc.,  separate  maps, 
pamphlets,  business  and  other  directories  on  these  islands  or  countries.  Many  of 
the  books  have  pictures;  but  several  thousand  more  pictures  are  in .  the  picture 
collection,  Art  department.  The  Business  Branch  on  Beaver  St.,  can  furnish  exact, 
up-to-date  business  information  about  these  countries. 

ASIA  (Continued) 

Resources.  Asia,  Eastern  Europe  and  Australia.  Reference  and  Re¬ 
source  map.  Shows  boundary  lines,  cities,  railroads,  caravan  routes, 
steamship  lines,  distances  in  nautical  miles,  canals,  heads  of  naviga¬ 
tion,  seaports,  natural  resources  and  products.  1:11,000,000.  N.  Y. 
Amer.  Asiatic  Assoc.  1919.  Envelope  (M.  L.).  Map  platform  (B.  B.). 
Asie-Carte  Economique.  1 :  35,000,000.  n.  d.  In  Vidal-Lablache,  Atlas- 
General,  PI.  119.  Paris.  Colin.  1918.  911  V66  R 

Maps  showing  the  Location  and  Distribution  of  the  Various  Products 
of  Asia,  chiefly  the  cereals  and  grains,  n.  s.  n.  d.  In  Bartholomew, 
J.  G.  Atlas  of  the  World’s  Commerece.  Various  plates.  Lond. 
Newnes.  1907.  (B.  B.  only).  380  B281  R 

Maps  Showing  the  Production  of  the  Various  Minerals  of  Asia. 
Various  plates  and  scales.  In  World  Atlas  of  Commercial  Geology. 
Pt.  1.  Wash,  D.  C.  U.  S,  Geol.  Survey.  1921.  (B.  B.  only).  I.  F. 

^Transcontinental  Routes.  General  Map  of  the  Transcontinental 
Routes  between  Asia  and  Europe,  n.  s,  n.  d.  In  Official  Guide,  v.  1. 

KOREA  or  CHOSEN 

*Cities.  Keijo  (Seoul).  1:32,000.  n.  d.  In  Official  Guide,  v.  1,  p.  267. 
Education.  Map  of  Chosen,  showing  distribution  of  government  and 
public  schools  for  Koreans,  n.  s,  n.  d.  In  Annual  Report  of  Re¬ 
forms  and  Progress  in  Chosen,  at  back  of  volume.  Seoul.  Govern¬ 
ment  General  of  Korea.  1916-17.  (B.  B.  only).  Information  file. 

General.  Map  of  Chosen.  Showing  railroads,  tramways,  ports,  im¬ 
proved  roads,  navigation  lines,  passes,  temples,  lighthouses,  etc. 

1 : 24,000,000.  n.  d.  In  Annual  Report  on  Reforms  and  Progress  in 
Chosen.  Seoul.  Govt.  General  of  Chosen.  1916-17.  (B.  B.  only).  I.  F. 

MANCHURIA 

*Cities.  Chang-Chien.  1 :  14,000.  n.  d.  In  Official  Guide,  v.  1,  p.  63. 
*Harbin.  1  : 40,000.  n.  d.  In  Official  Guide,  v.  1,  facing  p.  31. 

*Lu-shun.  (Port  Arthur).  1:15,000.  n.  d.  In  Official  Guide,  v.  1, 
facing  p.  183.  1913.  915.2  Of2  R 

*Mukden.  1 :20,000.  n.  d.  In  Official  Guide,  v.  1,  facing  p.  19. 

*General.  Manchuria.  1 : 3,000,000.  n.  d.  In  Official  Guide,  v.  1, 

facing  p.  1.  1913.  915.2  Of2  R 

*  In  the  Official  Guide  to  Eastern  Asia,  published  in  5  vols.  by  the  Imperial 
Japanese  Govt.  Railways,  Tokyo.  1913-1917.  915  Of2  R 


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. 

. 

. 


40.  Maps  of  the  Far  East 

Maps  are  at  both  Main  Library  and  Business  Branch,  except  those 
entries  marked  “B.  B.  only”  and  “M.  L-  only.” 

Far  Eastern  Book  and  Journal  Lists 

Public  Library,  Newark,  N.  J. 

These  books  here  listed  can  be  borrowed  for  home  use  unless  the  call  number  is 
followed  by  the  letter  R.  The  list  does  not  include  all  the  library’s  resources  on 
this  subject;  for  it  has  guide  books,  universal  geographies,  etc.,  separate  maps, 
pamphlets,  business  and  other,  directories  on  these  islands  or  countries.  Many  of 
the  books  have  pictures;  but  several  thousand  more  pictures  are  in  the  picture 
collection,  Art  department.  The  Business  Branch  on  Beaver  St.,  can  furnish  exact, 
up-to-date  business  information  about  these  countries. 

CHINA 

*Cities.  Canton.  1 : 25,000.  n.  d.  In  Official  Guide,  v.  4,  facing 
p.  339.  1915.  915  Of2  R 

*Che-Foo.  1:10,000.  n.  d.  In  Official  Guide,  v.  4,  facing  p.  131. 

1915.  915  Of2  R 

*Hankow.  1 : 40,000.  n.  d.  In  Official  Guide,  v.  4,  facing  p,  179. 

1915.  915  Of2  R 

*Hongkong.  1 :  17,000.  n.  d.  In  Official  Guide,  v.  4,  facing  p.  307. 

1915.  .  915  Of2  R 

Hongkong.  Showing  Praya  east  reclamation  scheme.  500  ft.  :  1  in. 
May  3,  1920.  In  Far  Eastern  Review,  June,  1921,  p.  396.  Shanghai. 
G.  B.  Rea.  (B.  B.  only). 

*Nanking.  1 : 40,000.  n.  d.  In  Official  Guide,  v.  4,  facing  p.  197. 

*  Peking.  1 : 36,000.  n,  d.  In  Official  Guide,  v.  4,  facing,  p.  37. 

*Swatow.  1 :  7,500.  n.  d.  In  Official  Guide,  v.  4,  facing  p.  297. 

^Shanghai.  1 :  18,000.  n.  d.  In  Official  Guide,  v.  4,  facing  p.  227. 

*Soochow.  1 : 30,000.  n.  d.  In  Official  Guide,  v.  4,  facing  p.  217. 

*Tientsin.  1:35,000.  n.  d.  In  Official  Guide,  v.  4,  facing  p.  17. 

Commerce.  Commercial  Map  of  China,  n.  s.,  n.  d.  In  Bartholomew, 

J.  G.  Atlas  of  the  World's  Commerce,  pi.  41.  Lond.  Newnes.  1907. 
(B.  B.  only).  380  B281  R 

General.  China,  Burma,  Siam,  Annam,  etc.  150  mi  :  1  in.  Lond. 

Bacon.  1900.  (M.  L.  only).  5  Envelope. 

Stanford’s  Map  of  China  and  Japan,  with  the  adjacent  parts  of  the 
Russian  Empire,  India,  Burma,  etc.  110  mi:  1  in.  Lond.  Stanford. 
1914.  (M.  L.  only).  Envelope. 

Indo-China.  Indochine  Frangais.  1 : 4,000.000.  n.  d.  In,  Vidal- 

Lablache,  Atlas  General,  pi.  81e.  Paris.  Colin.  1918.  911  V66  R 

^Physical.  Yangtze-Kiang  River.  1 :  1,200,000.  n.  d.  In  Official 

Guide,  v.  4,  facing  p.  139.  1915.  915  Of2  R 

Railroads.  Sketch  Map  of  China,  showing  railways,  n.  s.,  n,  d.  In 
Far  Eastern  Review,  Supplement,  April,  1921,  p.  56.  Shanghai. 
G.  B.  Rea.  (B.  B.  only). 

Resources.  Production  Map  of  China,  n.  s.  Swatow.  Chinese  Cus¬ 
toms  Service.  1911.  (B.  B.  only).  Vertical  map  file. 

*  In  the  Official  Guide  to  Eastern  Asia,  published  in  5  vols.  by  the  Imperial 

Japanese  Govt.  Railways,  Tokyo.  1913-1917.  915  Of2  R 


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